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US Midterms 2026
7MAY

Fellowship PAC ghost-ad draws GOP scrutiny

3 min read
15:03UTC

Fellowship PAC's reported $1.75 million Paxton advertisement never aired, according to GNCrypto News, drawing Republican leadership inquiries directed at Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The accounting questions are now in front of GOP leadership; the spending pattern is structural either way.

Crypto-aligned super PACs (political action committees) have spent more than $28 million on the cycle through April, according to Texas Tribune reporting. Fellowship PAC's reported $1.75 million advertisement supporting Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton never aired, GNCrypto News reported, drawing Republican leadership inquiries directed at Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick 1. Fellowship is the crypto-aligned PAC whose Q1 FEC (Federal Election Commission) filing on 15 April disclosed only $11 million against a publicly claimed $100 million war chest .

The ghost-ad story compounds the Q1 disclosure gap. Two separate accounting questions are now in front of Republican leadership: where the money went between the $100 million claim and the $11 million filing, and what the $1.75 million Paxton expenditure actually paid for if no advertisement ran. Lutnick is the relevant point of contact because of his Cantor Fitzgerald links and the $11 million the Q1 filing attributed to Cantor and Anchorage Digital. The leadership inquiry is procedural rather than disciplinary so far; it asks for clarification rather than imposing consequences.

The broader pattern is that crypto-aligned PAC money has become a structural feature of Republican primary politics this cycle. Fairshake, the largest crypto super PAC, disclosed $171 million cash on hand in its Q1 filing, with a $59 million gap from its publicly claimed $193 million figure . Counter-view from the PACs themselves: reporting discrepancies are routine in committees disclosing for the first time at this scale, and the FEC tolerates substantial reconciliation in the first cycle of operation. The harder question is whether the spending is producing measurable primary outcomes; through April, the answer is uneven, with Fellowship-backed candidates winning some Texas-area primaries while losing others.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A crypto industry political action committee called Fellowship PAC claimed to have spent $1.75 million on an advertisement supporting Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. But the advertisement apparently never aired, according to a crypto news outlet. This disclosure gap is now drawing questions from Republican leaders, directed at Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who runs Cantor Fitzgerald, the investment bank that gave Fellowship $10 million of its $11 million in confirmed donations. The broader context: crypto industry groups have spent over $28 million in this election cycle, but Fellowship's figures do not match its public claims.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Fellowship PAC's financial architecture runs through Cantor Fitzgerald and Anchorage Digital (ID:2462), institutions with no prior PAC operating experience. The Q1 filing gap between the $100 million public claim and the $11 million disclosed likely reflects a combination of promise-versus-receipt timing and crypto's initial coin offering era announcement culture, where stated fundraising targets are treated as commitments before money moves.

PAC reporting rules require that reported expenditures correspond to actual activity, not planned or contracted activity that never executed. The Paxton advertisement allegation therefore represents a second and independent accounting question: money missing from filings is one problem; money reported as spent on activity that never happened is another. Republican leadership appears to be treating them as separate in directing its inquiries at Lutnick.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Republican leadership inquiries directed at Lutnick may formalise into FEC referral if the ghost-ad discrepancy cannot be explained, creating a legal liability for Fellowship PAC and reputational exposure for Cantor Fitzgerald in the regulated financial sector.

  • Consequence

    The CLARITY Act markup stalling while Fellowship's accounting is publicly questioned reduces the regulatory window available to the crypto industry before the 2026 election changes Senate committee composition.

First Reported In

Update #4 · 189 Days to Go: Calendar versus court

GNCrypto News· 28 Apr 2026
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